Lowy fronted the media late on Wednesday afternoon following his first monthly roundtable with club chairmen, during which the issues of deep fan discontent and FFA's controversial stadium banning process were top of the agenda.

Chief executive David Gallop and other FFA employees will meet on Wednesday evening with representatives from all 10 clubs' active supporter groups to hear fans' grievances in the hope they will stop their match boycotts.

Lowy admitted that despite a productive day of discussions, the round-ball game's footing is still in precarious territory.

"The foundations do feel shaky today," Lowy said.

"Our objective is to take the shakiness away ... with goodwill and sound discussion.

"We have no other desire than to get the fans back to the game, and to do it quickly."

Lowy has had his hands full since taking over from father Frank last month, with News Corp Australia's publication of a leaked list of names and photos of 198 banned fans.

The FFA's belated response to the leak and perceived lack of leadership sparked outcry from coaches, players and executives and culminated in last weekend's boycotts which resulted in total crowds decreasing by nearly a third from the previous round.

"Everybody's frustrated by it," Lowy said.

"FFA's frustrated by it; the clubs are frustrated by it; clearly many fans are frustrated by it.

"We all want the one thing: we all want to get back to the game and support the clubs we love.

"We have a common objective."

The fan issue aside, it's well known some clubs have been campaigning for change.

But it's understood chairmen were by and large impressed with Lowy's ability on Wednesday to engage them and listen to their concerns.

Fans want a positive outcome from Wednesday night's discussions, but are expected to stand their ground on certain issues, notably FFA's promised review of their stadium ban appeals process including the transparency of evidence used against fans.

The unprecedented show of cross-club fan unity is already under a certain amount of strain, with some fans posting allegations on Twitter that FFA had leaked information about the meeting venue to the media, which FFA has denied.

Western Sydney's supporter group the Red and Black Bloc (RBB) also claimed some attendees had been screened, tweeting a photo purporting to show a FFA employee viewing the LinkedIn profile of one attendee.